Okay, Rae and I seem to do this a lot- I recently read Clara and Mr. Tiffany too! I was interested because I like Antiques Roadshow and Tiffany- our art museum has a decent collection.
Monday, March 12, 2012
Lynness: same books, again
Posted by Abby at 11:30 AM 0 comments
Raehink
Has it really been five years?!? Wow. I so enjoy hearing what y'all are reading out there.
Posted by raehink at 10:28 AM 0 comments
Tuesday, March 6, 2012
Lynness: This blog
I just wanted to say that I spent waaaay too long today reviewing old
posts to this blog and adding books to my to-read list on Goodreads and
remembering books I had forgotten I have read, but mostly enjoying the
discussion of ideas that our reading has brought up over the past 5
years (!). I'm glad we have this, and I hope that we will use it more
(the total number of posts was 17 for the year last year, which was what
we often did in a month the first year), 'cause I miss hearing what you
guys are reading and what you think about it. Mim- thanks for the
postcard out of the blue! Love you too!
Posted by Abby at 12:39 PM 0 comments
Monday, March 5, 2012
Lynness: Reading reference cookbooks
So, I got CookWise by Shirley Corriher, who is one someone restaurants and chefs go to when they are having problems with their recipes. It's a cooking reference book with almost 500 8.5x11 pages all about the properties of ingredients and how they interact chemically, and how time, temperatures, etc, affect them. It does have recipes, which are given to illustrate the principles in the chapter- I remember one set of recipes in particular, which are the same except for the order and technique used to mix them.
I don't know that it's really meant to be read straight through, but I did, and now I need to go back and take notes. I learned some interesting things, like why my zucchini bread has a rich green color around the sunflower seeds that has nothing to do with the zucchini (the flavenols in the sunflower seeds react with the alkali baking soda- a similar reaction makes the blue ring around cherries in baking). There's also troubleshooting helps- my first counselor was early for a presidency meeting and was browsing through it and learned that the reason her meringues bead up on top is that they get too hot. The solution, counter-intuitively, is too cook it at a higher temp to get it done faster, because lower but longer cooking actually gets the inside of the meringue hotter.
I've got 3 more food science books coming. I am a pretty decent cook, but I love learning why things work or don't, and I have some recipes that need a bit more....something. Maybe now I'll know what.
Posted by Abby at 8:23 AM 0 comments